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ashhh999 's review for:
The God of Endings
by Jacqueline Holland
"...that moon, that down turned face with its softly pitying expression, as if it were a spectator, a theatergoer watching the small comedies and tragedies unfold again and again on the tiny world below. do you know the ending, moon? have you seen this one before? is that why you watch with that look of resignation, your face white as if from the light of a cinema screen?"
OOOOHHHH THIS BOOK IS SO GOOD!!
anya. anna. collette. these are the different, but continued lives of the vampire. follows the main character throughout history from the 1600s to the present. there's an insatiable thirst for the life that she never got to live, living amongst those whose days are numbered while her's endures.
"you shall bloom, but never decay"
my little gothic heart is beaming. definitely references to Emily Dickinson in here. the main character has to keep moving as she doesn't age, so the reader gets to be at the heart of a lot of pivotal points in history (witch trials, ww1, & ww2) and many different places around the world (london, paris, boston, alexandria).
"...for some reason, it strikes me as fitting that art should cost the artist dearly, that the most beautiful things made by man should also be poisonous. it seems somehow consistent with what I've seen of this world and its men"
OOOOHHHH THIS BOOK IS SO GOOD!!
anya. anna. collette. these are the different, but continued lives of the vampire. follows the main character throughout history from the 1600s to the present. there's an insatiable thirst for the life that she never got to live, living amongst those whose days are numbered while her's endures.
"you shall bloom, but never decay"
my little gothic heart is beaming. definitely references to Emily Dickinson in here. the main character has to keep moving as she doesn't age, so the reader gets to be at the heart of a lot of pivotal points in history (witch trials, ww1, & ww2) and many different places around the world (london, paris, boston, alexandria).
"...for some reason, it strikes me as fitting that art should cost the artist dearly, that the most beautiful things made by man should also be poisonous. it seems somehow consistent with what I've seen of this world and its men"